First grain shipment leaves port
At a glance
ODESA: A ship carrying grain left the Ukrainian port of Odesa for foreign markets yesterday under a safe passage agreement, a Ukrainian minister said, the first departure since the Russian invasion blocked shipping through the Black Sea five months ago.
The sailing was made possible after Turkey and the United Nations brokered a grainandfertiliser export agreement between Russia and Ukraine last month.
The Turkish defence minister said earlier that the Sierra Leoneflagged ship Razoni, loaded with corn, would head to Lebanon. More ships would follow.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has led to a worldwide food and energy crisis and the UN has warned of the risk multiple famines this year.
Russia and Ukraine account for nearly a third of global wheat exports. But Western sanctions on Russia and fighting along Ukraine’s eastern seaboard have prevented grain ships safely leaving ports.
The deal aims to allow safe passage for grain shipments in and out of Chornomorsk, Odesa and the port of Pivdennyi.
Ukrainian presidential officials have said 17 ships were docked in Ukraine’s Black Sea ports with almost 600,000 tonnes of cargo. Of them, 16 vessels held Ukrainian grain with a total tonnage of about 580,000 tonnes.
Moscow has denied responsibility for the food crisis, blaming Western sanctions for slowing exports and Ukraine for mining the approaches to its ports.
Despite the breakthrough on the grain shipments, the war ground on elsewhere.
Russian missiles yesterday pounded Mykolaiv, a port city on the River Bug estuary off the Black Sea that borders the mostly Russianoccupied Kherson region.
Mykolaiv Mayor Oleksandr Senkevych said more than 12 missile strikes — probably the most powerful on the city in five months of war — hit homes and
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schools, with two people confirmed killed and three wounded.
Ukrainian grain tycoon Oleksiy Vadatursky, founder and owner of agriculture company Nibulon, and his wife were killed in their home, Mykolaiv Governor Vitaliy Kim said on Telegram.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy described Vadatursky’s death as ‘‘a great loss for all of Ukraine’’.
Zelenskiy said the businessman — one of Ukraine’s richest with Forbes estimating his 2021 net worth at $US430 million ($NZ680 million) — had been building a modern grain market with a network of transhipment terminals and elevators.
‘‘It is these people, these companies, precisely the south of Ukraine, which has guaranteed the world’s food security,’’ Zelenskiy said in his nightly address.
‘‘This was always so. And it will be so once again.’’
Zelenskiy said Ukraine may harvest only half its usual amount this year due to disruption to farming from the war. Farmers have reported trying to harvest in between Russian shelling of their fields and nearby towns.
Zelenskiy said Russia had been transferring some forces from the eastern Donbas region to the southern Kherson and Zaporizhizhya regions.
After failing to quickly capture the capital Kyiv early in the war Russia has turned its forces on Ukraine’s east and south.
Russia invaded in what it called a ‘‘special operation’’ to demilitarise its neighbour. Ukraine and Western nations have dismissed that as a baseless pretext for war. — Reuters